Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, June 21, 1906, Page 7, Image 7
KIDNEY TROUBLE 'ufferei Two Years—Relieved in Three Months. MS. C. If. FIZBB, Mt. Sterling, Ry., writes: • have suffered with kidney and bladder trouble for ten years past. " Last March I commenced using Peruna anil continued for three months. 1 have not used it siuce, nor have 1 felt i pain. "I believe that I am well and I there fore give my highest commendation to the curative qualities of Peruna." Pe-ru-na for Kidney Irouble. Mrs. Geo. 11. bimser, Grant, Ontario, Can., writes: " I had noti been well for about four years. / had kidney trouble, and, In fact, felt badly nearly all,the time. "This summer I pot s« very bad I thought I would try Peruna, so I wrote toyon and began at once totake Peruna aud Manalin. "I took only two bottles of Peruna and one of Manalin, and now I feel better than I have for some time. "1 feel that Peruna and Manalin cured | me and made a different « oman of me altogether. I bless the day) picked up Lhelittle book and read ofyour Peruna.' j It Is the business of the kidneys to remove from the blood all poisonous materials. They must be a«tive all the time, else the system suffers. There are j times when they need a little assistance, i Peruna is exactly this sor; of a rem- 1 edy. It has saved many pwiple from j disaster by rendering the kilneys ser vice at a time when they wete not able j to bear their own burdens. SPORTS OF CHILDREN. Skipping rope is a childish pastime j of ancient origin. In place of a rope, ' a vine stripped of leaves wui original ly used. The childish amusement rl riding a j cane is of great antiquity. It was i practiced by the children of Greece : and ancient Rome. The game of hide and seek is an- 1 other youthful pastiire of ancient origin. It came from fcurope about j the beginning of the cpn- j i favorite \ l in the j Creeks, "112 fun j 'ergil. I the • hn- j °a | I a | up ' or a is so i ood to j months I me brain ! got over! •th and, I quently a Col ielp, so i a visit. ! so very j he would I ho would I •r s home \ .ve must I although I | we got some I liim just the J 1 milk. He | e wem soon j ' itself and j e he fat rong and | ■ g worth j my girl i uts and ! hasi little | •ong, | but 1 e " I 11 j j GIVE THE BOY A ROOM. Let the Boy Have a Retreat of His | Own Which He May Arrange to | Suit His Own Tastes. You say it Is too expensive to s' ve each boy a room for his hobbies and belongings, but after all it will not cost as much as the Turkish rugs and costly furniture you arc thinking of j buying for the parlor this spring. Do j you owe most to your neighbors, or to ! your own bright, noisy boys. We wish that every boy might have j a room of his own. and be responsible for its care. The floor should be of I hardwood and uncarpeted, the furni- I ture solid and substantial. Let the ! boy have it decorated according to his ! own fancy. It will be interesting to i watch the growth of his artictic ideas, j There should be a bookcase, or desk, j a big solid table in the middle of the J room, with plenty of space for Sam's j printing press or Robert's box of tools ! or checkers and chessboards and other i harmless games. The boys should be j allowed to invite their friends to come j to this room, and now and then a treat ! may be provided for them. No doubt some one will ask what is J the use of spoiling boys in this way, , or of furnishing tliem with company j and games. Simply because they will have the amusement, the games and the com- j pany somewhere; and where is a more : suitable place than under the parental roof? No money can be wasted whicii j is spent in developing a boy's cliarac- j ter or which makes his home and fam- i ily more dear to him. Can you expect your boy to be char itable when you do not hesitate to talk before him of your neighbor? Can you expect your boy to he free from envy when, in a fault finding way you compare your circi'instances with those of your richer neighbor? j Can you expect your boy to tell the ; truth, when to save a little trouble you tell a falsehood? Can you exjject your boy to be re spectful to you when he hears you laugh at another's peculiarities? Can you expect your boy's religion to he one to live by when he can see that it has no part in your daily life? Boys brought up in a loving home, where they feel that they are impor tant. members of the family, seldom have bad habits. —Prairie Farmer. CULTIVATING THE CHILD. Give Him All Desivable Traits by Patiently, Persistently Guiding in 1 Early Formative Period. There is not a single desirable attri bute which, lacking in a plant, may not be bred into it. Choose what improve ment you wish in a flower, a fruit, oi a tree, and by crossing, selection, cul tivation and persistence you can fix this desirable trait irrevocably. Pick out any trait you want in your child, granted that he is a normal child—l shall speak of the abnormal later—be it honesty, fairness, purity, lovabie uess, industry, thrift, what not. By surrounding this child with sunshine from the sky and your own heart, by giving the closest communion with na ture, by feeding th?m well-balanced, nutritious food, by giving them all that is implied in healL'iful environmental influences, and by doing all in love, you can thus cultivate in this child and fix there for ali their life all of these traits. Naturally not always to the full in all cases at the beginning of the work, for heredity will make it self felt first, and, as in the plant un der improvement, there will be cer tain strong tendencies to reversion to : former ancestral traits; but, in the main, with the normal child, you can give him all these traits by patiently, 1 persistently guiding him in these earlv formative years. And, on the other side, give him foul air to breathe, keep him in a dusty ' factory or an unwholesome school room or a crowded tenement lip under the hot roof; keep !i<m away from the sunshine, take away from him music and laughter and happy faces; cram his little brains with so-called know ledge, all the more deceptive and dan- j gerous because made so apparently ! adaptable to his roung mind; let him ! have associates in hi? hours out of , .-ciiuoi, and at ihb nge of fen you have ' fixed in him the opposite traits. lio Is on his way to the r-allows. you have perhaps seen a prairie fire sweep 1 through the tall grass across a plain. Nothing can stand before it, it must! burn itself out. That is what happens j when you Jet the weeds grow up jn a child's life, and then set fire to them ! by wrong environment.—The Century j A Tasty Chop for Invalid. Trim away every particle of fat from a neck or loin chop, melt a piece of j butter on a plate, sprinkle the chop | with pepper and salt; dip both side*; in the butter, and rprinkle a little ' lemon juice over the top, leaving it la j the butter for at leai;t two hours. Put! the yolk of an egg on a plate, with a 1 teaspoonful of grated cheese. Mix It I together, and mask the chop freely | with the mixture. Have ready some ! boiling dripping in a frying-pan, lay in the chop, and let It cook thoroughly 1 first on one side, a»d then on the : other; it will take quite six minutes; to cook, the fat kept boiling the I whole of the time. Drain it on a piece of clean paper, and serve on a little ' mound of nicely mashed potato, as hot 1 as possible. A Ham Sidedish. ice for luncheon is this entree of ! illed ham: ChDp enough ham to ; "fee cup and add to it. two ta- | of grated cheese, a little 1 t and two tablespoonfuis ! rounds of bread in but- j i over the ham mixture. 1 over the top and brown 1 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1906. HORTICULTURE MARKING AN ORCHARD. How Rapid Work May Be Don 6 with tin Old Wheel and Money Saved. The diagram below shows wheel for laying out ground for orchard that I have used for some years. The draw- ■ ing shows for itself how made; two boards 10 feet long, Ix 4, put together as shown, with wheel at one end, and j wide enough apart at the other for a man to stand inside, and draw it. An j old wheelbarrow wheel is what 1 use. • i TllK MARKER FOR ORCHARD. When you have your ground, say 10 | acres more or less, ready, establish base lines, writes a Michigan orchard ist to the Rural New Yorker. Then draw this wheel from one tree point to one on opposite side of field back and forth, until marked one way. Then mark the field the other way, and at the point where the wheel marks cross is the place for a tree. hole is to be dug there, and the tree is to be set on a line each way with the mark. Not a stake need be set except togo by in marking. One : man can work ground for 1,000 trees ! in eight hours, and the trees will be ; in perfect line each way. Any man who can follow the line of two stakes j can do the marking. A variation of ! a man's body from side to side does j not affect the wheel 8 or 10 feet back, 1 and the wheel mark is so unlike any j other mark that there is no danger of losing the line. In setting 1,400 ; peach trees I saved at least $lO by j this method, beside having every tree j exactly in line. FIGHTING CANKER WORMS. 1 Interesting Experiment by Prof, j Slingerland at Cornell University. The class taking advanced work in ] economic entomology at Cornel], N. Y., made an interesting experiment, writes Prof. Slingerland in the Cornell Countryman. For several years a group of large elm trees about a mile from the uni versity campus have been nearly de foliated by hordes of spring canker worm caterpillars. These little meas uring-worms hatch in May from eggs : laid on the hark by moths that emerge i in March and April from pupae in the j soil beneath the trees. The male moths have well-developed wings and fly readily, but the females j are wingless and are thus obliged to crawl up the trees and deposit their | eggs on the hark of the branches. The I ascent Is always made at night. Vari- , oils devices, such as sticky bands, and I wire, tin or stiff paper barriers, have i been used on the trunks of trees to j prevent the ascent of the wingless fe- j male moths. Recently a fly paper manufacturer has made a tree-tanglefoot mixture, and with a liberal sample furnished by the firm, several of the infested elm trees were treated. One tree was more than two feet in diameter and the bark was very rough. It took sev eral pounds of the tanglefoot to make a complete band six or eight inches wide around the trunk, several feet from the ground. The application was made on March 15, just before the moths began "running" up the trees. Great masses of the wingless fe male moths were found March 31 on the lower edge of the sticky band, and thousands of flying males were caught all over the band. A few females were able to get over the band where dead males had formed narrow bridges across the tanglefoot, Several oint« or Many thousands of the females were caught and killed by the band on this one large tree. As each fe male may lay 200 or more eggs, the tree was relieved from feeding hun dreds of thousands of ranker-worms in May. The experiment was thus a striking success and has furnished a valuable object lesson." Yes, and It should furnish a useful object lesson to the farmer. The spring spring canker-worm often at tacks oth< r trees besides elms—apple treeß, for instance. If the Jtanglefoot preparation is not readily obtainable, other sticky substances may be used. Tar, printers' ink, thick molasses, bird-lime, or bands of fly-paper, are all more or less useful for the pur pose. If fly-paper is used, remember that it should be at least five inches wide, and must fit close to the bark. On rough-bark trees, the bark must either be scraped smooth where the band is togo, or all depressions must be filled with clay or putty, so as to make a smooth surface on which to fasten the sticky band. Coddling moth: This is the pest that causes apples. As soon as the blossoms fall, spray the trees with the Bordeaux-arsenate mixture. He peat in ten days. Now don't delay. The work must be done right after the falling of the blossoms.—Prairie Farmer. Head your trees low so that you won't have to call out the fire depart ment with the extension ladder when you goto spray your orchard. SEVEN YEARS AGO A Rochester Chemist Found a Singu larly Effective Medicine. William A. Franklin, of the Frank lin & Palmer Chemical Co., Rochester, j g] "Seven years ago | I I was suffering very 1 OK. I much through the 1 u ' a " ure °* t * le fi ney3 to ellminate I•' the ur ' c aci( * * rom back was very lame overexerted myself in the least degree. At times I was weighed down with a feeling of languor and depression and suffered continually from annoying Ir regularities of the kidney secretions. I procured a box of Doan's Kidney Pills and began using them. I found prompt relief from the aching and lameness in my back, and by the time I had taken three boxes I was cured of all irregularities." Sold by all dealers; 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. DIAMOND DEALER'S MISTAKE One of His Own Gems, But He Failed to Recognize the Sparkler. "Will you please examine this dia mond," said a man who had stepped into a jeweler's shop, "and tell me what you think of it? If it is a good stone, I think I will buy it." The jeweler took the gem, which was unset, and looked at it critically for c moment. Then in a confidential tone he said: "Well, to tell you the truth, that isn't a very good stone. It hasn't much lire, it is badly cut, and there is some thing here very much like a Haw." Then he held the diamond under a mi croscope and examined it carefully, finally observing: "No, it isn't exactly a flaw, but I shouldn't call it a per pect stone. Now, if you want some thing really fine, here—" "Excuse me," the other man inter rupted. "I don't think I'll buy a dia mond to-day. This is a diamond that one of your assistants let me t ike Sat urday on approval. I deposited S4O on It. Please let me have my money, and we will declare the deal off." BITS FOR BACHELORS. Many men think themselves self made who are really marriage-made. The man who avoids matrimony on account of the cares of wedded life rivals the wiseacre who secured him self against corns by having his legs amputated. Don't marry for beauty alone. Soo rates called beauty "a short-lived tyr anny." and Theophrastus pronounced it "a silent cheat." The man who marries for beauty alone is as silly as the man who would buy a house be cause it had fine flowers in the front garden. It is In life as It is with a kite; It will not fly very high until it has a string tying it down. And so the man who is tied down by half a dozen re sponsibilities and their mother will make u higher and stronger fight thar. the bachelor who, having nothing to keep him steady, is always floundering in the mud. • The Only Good. "Father, why do these automobiles puff out so much smoke behind?" "Stupid! So the policeman can't see the number!"—Meggendorfer Blatter. There is only One 1 The Genuine is Manufactured by the lrejra^a^^ The full name of the company, California Fig Syrup Co H ' Is printed on the front of every package of the genuine. fUI / The Genuine- Syrup of Figs- is for Sale, in Original Packages Only, by Reliable Druggists Everywhere :H Knowing the above will enable one to avoid the fraudulent imita- YVv> : '•' fit I tions made by piratical concerns and sometimes offered by unreliable |jps| .. fj dealers. The imitations are known to act injuriously and should V* V : therefore be declined. j Buy the genuine always if you wish to get its beneficial effects. / Jf| f[|l It cleanses the system gently yet effectually, dispels colds and headaches I when bilious or constipated, prevents fevers and acts best on the &W kidneys, liver, stomach and bowels, when a laxative remedy is needed by men, women or children. Many millions know of its beneficial mmzmM effects from actual use and cf their own personal knowledge. It is the laxative remedy of the well-informed. jsoi § iJPPBS (Always buy the Genuine— Syrup of Figs MANUFACTURED BY THE LouiniOc, K)! Sanl^cisco.foJ. PRICE NMNR CENTS PER EOTTIX CONCERNING CLOCKS. Never allow the clock to run down. It responds to regular attention just as surely as a human being does and keeps its course truly when made to follow its endless routine. The hands of a clock should always j be turned forward. To set the hands by reversing tne right-hand motion is | to loosen delicate screws that hold ■ them within reach of various cog | slips. Never allow the clock to be moved j from the position where it is well bal | anced. A deviation of two or three minutes a day from the correct time j may be the result of an uneven ! placing of the clock, and once It Is properly adjusted it should not be I shifted for dusting or for artistic pur -1 poses. This is especially true of j clocks that have a pedulum. LIMB WASTED WiTH ECZEMA. Suffered Untold Agonies—Doctor Said It Was the Worst Case—Wonder ful Cure by Cuticura. "I Ufed the Cuticura Remedies for ec zema. The doctor said it was the worst j case he ever saw. It was on both limbs, from the knees to the ankles. We trieJ everything the doctors knew of, but the Cuticura Remedies did the most good. I | was obliged to lie with my limbs higher than my head, for the pain was so ter rible 1 could not walk. 1 suffered untold I agonies. One limb wasted away a great I deal smalle- than the other, there was so 1 much discharge from it.l found the Cuti ; cura Remedies very soothing, and 1 ! still keep them in the house.l am j very thankful to say that I am cured. I ! found the Cuticura Remedies all that you say they are. I hope that you may* be j spared many years to make the Cuticura Remedies for the benefit of persons suffer | ing from the torture of skin diseases, such as I had. Mrs. Golding, Box 8, Ayr, Ontario, Canada, June 6, 1905." PROFIT POINTERS. Nobody wants an over-anxious man. He gets on one s nerves. Did you ever kuow a "tricky" man to make a permanent success? Matter is comi>or,cu of atoms. Busi nesses are built up by attention to de tails. Business is not necessarily hard work. Make it good fun, and you'll do more. For Infants hilly Years * The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY 6TRECT, NEW YORK CITY. ALLEN'S FDOT-EABE c^T^T A Certain Cure for Tired, Hoi, Aching Feet. V\**«/v»JQfiBK.— DO NOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE. on every boi. LcHoy°Js! C lf' WHOOPING COUGH Q Jft wp Ji Fend •• Triven DI'XIIAM'H NI'KdKIC Shorten.* and Llghtem r Q I r 1 '5,1. ri'mj.™ Oirh**T^«ylm«H l *Ki^orwci W |»y Fh vrtcUn? C 's'TdTj " M I til I W Established 1864 PENSIONS Lickea Drug Co., Mfrs., CLEVELAND, O. Brauehei at Chicago, Cleveland, lletroll 17 Sunday School opening exercises; Bible ff «««„,«,«_ ( ,k . •. , . m» * - Course for the Young; Quiet Hour with Moth- , U eyes u»e 1 ThOIUDSOn S Eye Water ers Thoughtful Hour with Father; Send 10 cents ! ' (or all * to MISS ELBKKTINK ROBERTSON, 1«30 10tli Street, N.W., WASIUNUTON, D.O. j A. N. K.—C (1903—24) 2130. enable you to enjoy your meals without hiving to upend half your time between them over a hot cook-stove. All the cooking is done in Libby's kitchen- a kitchen as clean and neat as your own, and there's nothing for you to do but enjoy the result. Libby's Products are selected meats, cooked by cooks who know how, and only the good parts packed. , ror a quick and delicious lunch any I'me, in doors or out, try Libby's Mel rose Pate-- with Libby's Camp Sauce. Booklet free, "How to Mska Coed ri jncs to L*l" Writs Libby, McNeill 9 Libby, Chicago NORTHWEST AND RETURN Portland, Tacoma, Seattle, Belling ham, Everett, Vancouver, Vic toria and New Westminster. One Fare or $62 JO For the round trip FROM CHICAGO Tickets on sale June 18, 10, 20, 21, 22, 1906. Final return limit 60 days from date of sale. VIA UNION PACIFIC The Short Line to Portland. INQUIRE OK W. G. NEIMYER, G. A., 120 JACKSON BOULEVARD, CHICAGO, ILL. 7